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ISN’T THAT… High Velocity Victoria Rowell In spite of difficult early years as a foster child, Portland native Victoria Rowell’s ties to Maine are unshakable. Here’s what she’s up to now! BY COLIN W. SARGENT n May 10, 1959, future ballet principal, dazzling actress, Ph.D., Obestselling author, and movie mogul Victoria Rowell was born at Mercy Hospital in Portland. This summer, she’s shooting a film in which she’s the executive producer, direc- tor, screenwriter, and a lead actress. We caught up with her as her production com- pany, Days Ferry Productions, LLC, revs up to full throttle. The village of Days Ferry goes way back in Maine history before it became Woolwich. Established in 1754 on the banks of the Kennebec, it seems almost like a fable—a magic place, like Brigadoon. Is Days Ferry your Castle Rock? Well, I’ll tell you, I love history. I cover my Maine connections in my memoir The Wom- en Who Raised Me [Harper Collins, 2007, a New York Times best seller]. My mother’s side of the family is buried in the Castine cemetery. In our family plot, one of our fam- ily members was the drummer boy for the 16th Regiment in the Revolutionary War. I named my production company Day’s Fer- ry in 1999, when I was house-hunting along the coast. I was very close to buying a fab- ulous house on Peaks Island, with mature trees I loved but no septic. I couldn’t be 3,000 miles away [in Hollywood] and have no sep- ed. It was in Days Ferry. Since you’re the executive producer, director, lead actress, Y VICTORIA ROWELL S tic tank! Anyway, I kept looking. And during and co-screenwriter, how did you pitch it to yourself? this journey I saw a spellbinding place set on What’s the name of your new film? The logline is “An American family dra- COURTE the water. It had gone many years unattend- Jacqueline and Jilly. No ampersand. ma—three women, two shattered dreams, SUMMERGUIDE 2 0 1 8 2 1 1 ISN’T THAT… Back Story Featured in Jacqueline and Jilly, from left: Daphne Reid, Richard Brooks, and Nikko Austen Smith. Victoria was a cast member of the long- one addiction.” The father’s a well-heeled covery. The goal is to have family early on running soap opera The Young and the lobbyist in Newport News, Virginia—horse have a conversation. Restless. According to her filmography on country. They share a charmed life. They IMBD, she filmed 657 episodes playing live in the perfect house with a perfect, You directed all six episodes of The Rich and the Ruthless Drucilla Barber Winters. manicured lawn. There’s the pious grand- last year. Working in all three dimensions as executive Wasn’t she in… mother, the mother, and the daughter, producer, writer, and director, not to mention acting in • Yes! Rowell played Dr. Amanda Bentley- training to be an Olympic equestrian. She the movie this summer, do you think you’ll experience, at Livingston, who helped Dick Van Dyke’s character, Dr. Mark Sloan, solve crimes in has a nasty fall. When she turns to opioids, least creatively, multiple personality disorder? Diagnosis Murder. her mother goes into denial. How could our Hollywood has changed because the indus- • Just some of this multi- daughter possibly have become an addict? try has changed. UMC, award-winning actress’s This couldn’t happen to us. How could she HULU, Netflix—the movies: Water in a Broken possibly behave this way? business morphs every Glass (2018), Of Boys and day. There is heavy lifting Men, The Feast of All Saints, as an executive producer, A Wake in Providence, “You know what big is for but luckily I’ll have help Dumb and Dumber, The Dis- there. I’ve been to Vir- tinguished Gentleman. a storm in Maine. Well, a ginia twice for the scout- • She has a doctor- ing process. We start ate from The University of Southern Maine and Bos- production on July 21 bolt of lightning ton’s Wheelock College rec- and wrap on August 4. ognizing her work in foster went through one window We’ve been blessed with care and adoption. the Riverside Region- • In 1990 she started the and out the other!” al Hospital allowing us Rowell Foster Children’s to film at an annex that Positive Plan, which provides is not being used at this fine art scholarships for fos- What’s the heart of the story? time. I’ve met the mayor of Newport News. ter children and adopted youth. Portland It’s about the family peeling back the onion. Hampton University is allowing us to shoot native Taurean Green was selected for the I started tinkering with this story in 2006. on their historic campus. program when he was 11 years old. He went Now we are in a pandemic with opioid ad- on to study with San Francisco Ballet and danced with Pacific Northwest Ballet before diction, with a 13-percent uptick in the last What script software do you use? joining Dance Theatre of Harlem in 2011. year. In the story, first there’s the denial, like WriterDuet. It’s an amazing piece • Victoria was eight years old when she then the acceptance, then the resolution. I of software that allows multiple writ- received the Ford Foundation Scholarship to pitched it to the Government Film Office in Iers to work on one script. My main co- the Cambridge School of Ballet in Harvard Washington, D.C. We’re negotiating a Lin- writer is Patricia Cuffie-Jones. I’ve already Square. She would go on to receive scholar- coln Theatre debut in Washington. The rea- worked successfully with her—I did one of ships to the School of American Ballet, The son everybody’s interested is because there’s her plays in D.C. For my computer, I use a American Ballet Theatre, and the Dance such a need. That’s why it’s PG-13. It’s less Macbook Pro. You’ll laugh, but as a Main- Theatre of Harlem. She studied at the Ameri- on the optics of drug addiction than on the er, a daughter of Maine, I’m an extreme- can Ballet Theatre School before joining the person who’s in recovery, and the impor- ly practical person. My Timberland boots American Ballet Theatre II Company. tance of family in contributing to that re- must be 18 years old, and this Macbook 2 1 2 PO R TLAND M O N THLY MAGAZINE Pro must be eight years old! It reminds me of the 1955 Thunderbird I used to drive. Just because something’s old doesn’t mean it’s broken. Who are your lead actors? Richard Brooks, a star from Law and Or- der; Daphne Reid [The Fresh Prince of Bel- Air], a consummate actress; myself; and I believe in casting newcomers. Nikko Aus- ten Smith plays the daughter. nine ® Alfred Hitchcock says, “Great villain, great movie.” Who’s stones your great villain? he villain in this case is the opioid, sPa the addiction. By virtue of the ther- Tapist and the doctor, who’s played by Lamont Easter [House of Cards, VEEP, Madame Secretary], we’re able to get facts to the viewer dramatically. I’m consulting with Dr. Jocelyn Cox, a leading addiction psychiatrist in Atlanta [Associate Addiction Psychiatry Fellowship Program Director at Emory School of Medicine]. She’s been reading the script. Is there a figure who’s the conscience of the film? Yes, the grandmother, Zillah Stuart, is the conscience. As is the case with many grandparents, she might lament what’s hap- pening to her granddaughter, but she dotes on her. She’s astonished that her grand- daughter could be addicted to painkillers or worse. She is the North Star in the nar- rative. She offers levity too, which is impor- tant with this subject matter. There has to be a balance. The audience has to have ten- sion and release, tension and release. How much does your longtime foster mom in Maine, Agatha Armstead, float into Zillah’s character? Agatha is in all that I do. She’s very regal S and wise and humorous, like Zillah. OTO ph What’s the funniest thing Agatha ever told you? Y S It’s more mystical than funny. On her 60-acre farm in West Lebanon, Maine, where I grew up—I went to school in Ber- wick—we had an over 200-year-old farm- B SOUL; COURTE PortlandKidsDuathlon.com RL house, a barn, and some outbuildings. She T: F purchased the property after the war in the LE P 1940s. She was a proper Bostonian—very Pedals & Medals Sponsors 2018 Beneficiary religious. I’ll never forget what she told me. ROM TO F There was a big electrical storm that caught E S the house by surprise with its windows Full sponsor list at portlandkidsduathlon.com open. You know what big is for a storm LOCKWI C in Maine. Well, a bolt of lightning went SUMMERGUIDE 2 0 1 8 2 1 3 ISN’T THAT… through one window and out the other! Agatha was my inspiration, the quintessen- tial mentor. She studied piano at New Eng- land Conservatory, and it was she who saw my love of dance. Some people are meant to be raised by one mother. I was meant to be raised by many. Agatha guided me toward a dance scholarship in Boston [Cambridge School of Ballet] that lasted for eight years and started so much for me.
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